Diet has shaped human
jaw bones; a result that could help explain why many people suffer with
overcrowded teeth, according to a report by the BBC.
The
study has shown that jaws grew shorter and broader as humans took on a more
pastoral lifestyle.
Before
this, developing mandibles were probably strengthened to give hunter-gatherers
greater bite force.
The
results were published in the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
"This
is a fascinating study which challenges the common perception that there has
been little recent change in the morphology of humans," said
anthropologist Jay Stock from the University
of Cambridge .
Many
scientists have suggested that the range of skull shapes that exist within our
species is the result of exposure to different climates, while others have
argued that chance played more of a role in creating the diversity we see in
people's profiles.
The
new data, collected from over 300 skulls, across 11 populations, shows that
jaws shortened and widened as humans moved from hunting and gathering to a more
sedentary way of life.
The
link between jaw morphology and diet held true irrespective of where people
came from in the world, explained anthropologist Noreen von Cramon-Taubadel
from the University
of Kent .
Concurrently crooked
It would be tempting to conclude that this is
evidence for concurrent evolutionary change - where jaw bones have evolve to be
shorter and broader multiple, independent times, she told BBC News.
But
the sole author of the paper suggested that the changes in human skulls are
more likely driven by the decreasing bite forces required to chew the processed
foods eaten once humans switch to growing different types of cereals, milking
and herding animals about 10,000 years ago.
"As
you are growing up... the amount that you are chewing, and the pressure that
your chewing muscles and bone [are] under, will affect the way that the lower
jaw is growing," explained Dr von Cramon-Taubadel.
She
thinks that the shorter jaws of farmers meant that they have less space for
their teeth relative to hunter-gatherers, whose jaws are longer.
Teeth-pulling tale
"I have had four of my pre-molars pulled
and that is the only reason that my teeth fit in my mouth," said Dr von
Cramon-Taubadel.
Ever
since that time, she has wondered why so many people suffer with
teeth-crowding.
"I
think that's the reason why this result resonates with people," she said.
Dr
Stock added: "[The finding] is particularly important in that it
demonstrates that variation that we find in the modern human skeletal system is
not solely driven by population history and genetics."
These
results fit with previous evidence of both a reduction in tooth and body size
as humans moved to a more pastoral way of life.
It
also helps explain why studies of captive primates have shown that animals tend
to have more problems with teeth misalignment than wild individuals.
Further
evidence comes from experimental studies that show that hyraxes - rotund,
short-tailed rabbit-like creatures - have smaller jaws when fed on soft food
compared to those fed on their normal diet.
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